Support the Passage of H.R. 676
The United States National Health Insurance Act
Link to: The Full Text of the Bill HR 676 or Read the Summary Below
|
to Vote! |
See Financing Plan for HR 676
or
List of Co-sponsors Below
Print Out the Summary Below if you wish
The United States National Health Insurance Act, (Expanded and Improved Medicare For All)
The “United States National Health Insurance Act,” H.R. 676
(“Expanded & Improved Medicare For All Bill”)
*Introduced by Rep. John Conyers
Brief Summary of Legislation
The United States National Health Insurance Act establishes a unique American national universal health insurance program. The bill would create a publicly financed, privately delivered health care system that uses the already existing Medicare program by expanding and improving it to all U.S. residents, and all residents living in U.S. territories. The goal of the legislation is to ensure that all Americans will have access, guaranteed by law, to the highest quality and most cost effective health care services regardless of their employment, income, or health care status. With over 45-75 million uninsured Americans, and another 50 million who are under- insured, the time has come to change our inefficient and costly fragmented non- health care system.
Who is Eligible
Every person living or visiting in the United States and the U.S. Territories would receive a United States National Health Insurance Card and ID number once they enroll at the appropriate location. Social Security numbers may not be used when assigning ID cards.
Health Care Services Covered
This program will cover all medically necessary services, including primary care, inpatient care, outpatient care, emergency care, prescription drugs, durable medical equipment, long term care, mental health services, dentistry, eye care, chiropractic, and substance abuse treatment. Patients have their choice of physicians, providers, hospitals, clinics, and practices. No co-pays or deductibles are permissible under this act.
Conversion To A Non-Profit Health
Care System
Private health insurers shall be prohibited under this
act from selling coverage that duplicates the benefits of the USNHI
program. Exceptions to this rule include
coverage for cosmetic surgery, and other medically unnecessary
treatments. Those who are displaced as the result of the transition to
a non- profit health care system are the first to be hired and
retrained under this act.
Cost Containment Provisions/ Reimbursement
The National USNHI program will set reimbursement rates annually for physicians, allow for global budgets (annual lump sums for operating expenses) for health care providers; and negotiate prescription drug prices. A “Medicare For All Trust Fund” will be established to ensure a dedicated stream of funding, as well as an annual appropriation to ensure optimal levels of funding for the program.
The conversion to a not-for-profit health care system will take place over a 15 year period, through the sale of U.S. treasury bonds.
HR 676 Would Reduce Overall Health Care Costs
Families Pay Less
A study by nationally recognized economist, Dean Baker, of the Center for Economic Research and Policy concluded that under H.R. 676, a family of three making $40,000 per year would spend approximately $1900 per year for healthcare coverage. Currently, (in 2007) the average annual premium for families covered under an employee health plan is $11,000. (National Coalition on Health Care.)
Business Pays Less
In 2005, without reform, the average employer that offers coverage was contributing $2,600 to health care per employee (for much skimpier benefits), or 217.00 per month. Under HR 676, the average costs to employers for an employee making $30,000 per year will be reduced to $1,425 per year; or about $119.00 per month.
Baker's study reported that HR 676 would reduce health spending in 2005 from $1 trillion, 918 billion dollars to 1 trillion, 861.3 billion dollars, which translates into a saving of $56 billion in overall health care spending while covering all of the uninsured. This is a 3% reduction in over-all health care spending.
Proposed Funding For USNHI Program:
Maintain current federal and state funding for existing health care programs; employer payroll tax of 4.75, an employee payroll tax of 4.75; establish a 5% health tax on the top 5% of income earners; 10% tax on top 1% of wage earners, 1/3rd of 1% stock transaction tax, closing corporate tax loop-holes; repeal the Bush tax cut for the highest income earners.
*For more information, contact Joel Segal or Alexia Smokler, Rep. John Conyers, at 202 225-5126.
Please call your Member of Congress and also please make a contribution to Healthcare-NOW to help us get hearings on this critical legislation. The Democrats and the Republicans both need our encouragement to take this issue seriously. Get free copies of "Improved and Enhanced Medicare for All: How it Will Work," our new MLK, JR poster, and Congressman John Conyers' 7 minute DVD about how to win this issue along with the book, "Medical Apartheid" for a contribution of $100. Click Donate NOW-- RIGHT NOW! Thanks.
New Co-Sponsors of H.R. 676
FREE calls to Congress -- Let's get 100 on board now and get them to hold hearings. See list below.
1-866-338-1015
For more information on the
bill, click here: THOMAS Home | Contact | Accessibility | Legal | FirstGov
ORDER: bulk copies of "Improved Medicare for All, How it Will Work" prioritypress@optonline.net or CONTRIBUTE $75 AND GET THREE GIFTS: one COPY OF "HOW IMPROVED MEDICARE FOR ALL WILL WORK" along with the new 7 minute DVD of John Conyers' "Giant Steps" explaining how we can win this fight for single payer national healthcare for all, a free Martin Luther King Jr. poster. Send copies to your Senators and House Members too. Spanish or English. And ask your Senators to introduce a companion bill. We are doing extremely well adding new members of Congress, but we need to triple that number asap.
We are disgraced as a nation that we do not have a healthcare system that serves our people. We are # 37 in the world in the provision of healthcare to our people. We are #43 in the world in infant mortality behind Cyprus, South Korea, and Slovenia. (OECD) It is time for a change! Organizations can ENDORSE here.